Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Psychopathology, #Young Adult Fiction, #Psychology, #Family, #Drug abuse, #Family problems, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #General, #Parents, #Addiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Novels in verse, #Problem families, #Romance, #Dating & Sex, #Health & Fitness, #Schools, #Cocaine abuse, #Pregnancy & Childbirth, #High schools, #Pregnancy
Unforgettable
Birthdays
aren't easy to come by.
* *
Do you remember
Your 4th? Your 12th?
* *
To my 90th birthday,
I will never forget my 17th.
* *
If you do remember
them, why?
* *
It was a day of firsts: giving
myself willingly to ecstasy.
To a man. A needle.
* *
Presents? Surprises?
Firsts?
* *
It didn't hurt, not at all.
The sting was rather
pleasant, like excising an ingrown toenail.
* *
Or did pain define
those memorable days?
* *
Now take the rush of snorting, multiply by
100, you get smoking.
To find mainlining, you
approach infinity.
434
Have you ever once in your life
reached out to touch infinity?
435
E
levation
Oh, but a whole lot more. They say people who die from ecstasy die from overheating.
* *
Adding speed to the mix accelerates the process because it makes you want to dance until the sun comes up.
* *
The music made me dance. It entered my brain, firing spark plugs and pistons. It revved me to my feet.
* *
The crank was jet fuel, pumping through my veins, propulsion.
I shifted into overdrive, motor heating steadily.
* *
I danced with guys, I danced with girls, hotter, closer, melting together like candles in a south-facing window.
* *
Our dance was primitive, beautiful, waves at high tide.
Our dance was sensual, sexual, and yet somehow innocent.
* *
Spent calories orbited, raising temperatures. Some drank alcohol.
The wise drank water. It tasted as good as champagne.
* *
And then somehow the subject of my birthday came up.
Word spread and the mood elevated beyond celebratory.
436
Gifted with kisses. Tender. Probing. Inviting. Feminine. Masculine.
One emptying into the next, eddies in the swollen river.
* *
I kept my eyes closed, absorbing sensation until it screamed for release. So the part that came next seemed very right.
437
I
Don't Know
whose blade it was, whose idea it was.
* *
I don't remember
saying yes.
I know I didn't
say no.
* *
The knife was sharp.
One knick at my wrist.
It didn't even hurt.
It didn't seem wrong.
* *
Rust in my mouth.
Rich red salt.
I drank it down, asked for more.
438
Offered my own to those who would partake.
Fever. Fire. I was on fire.
Time hesitated.
Solid earth gave way.
Strong arms caught me, carried me into the cool of outside.
* *
A familiar mouth found mine.
I looked into Chase's eyes, found emotions in turmoil.
* *
Fear. Need. Concern. Lust.
And then he said the words
we were both afraid to hear.
I
love you, Kristina.
439
I
Was Cinderella
and Chase was my unlikely Prince Charming.
(Hey, I'd graduated from knights to princes, even if they were unlikely.)
* *
Suddenly I was very sure.
"I love you, too, Chase."
For real?
* *
I reached up and kissed him and it was very, very real, despite the quite
surreal juxtaposition of colors in the night sky.
You take my breath away.
* *
"Make love to me. Please? I don't
care who sees." He might have.
But just then his watch beeped "two."
No way. Come on, let's go!
* *
Well beyond the witching hour,
Chase hustled most of his guests
out the door. (A few were tied up in the bedrooms.)
I
didn't want to piss off your parents.
440
We wouldn't make it home until almost three. But the E insisted
I remain hopeful.
"They're always in bed by ten..."
Doesn't look
like they're asleep.
* *
Every light was on, upstairs and down, and I caught my mom's face at the window. We had turned back into pumpkins after all.
441
If
You Guessed
I was GUFN, two points for you.
Can you believe Chase was brave enough to walk me to the door?
Mom pounced.
"Do you realize it's three A.M.?"
* *
Chase tried to apologize, said we'd lost track of time, talking.
"I'm
sure
that was all you were doing."
* *
Mom lectured him on responsibility and gave
him the old,
"We were worried to death!"
* *
(She looked just fine to me.) What could
Chase do but nod?
"Well, Kristina won't be going
anywhere for a while."
* *
I tried to talk my way
out of her anger zone.
No good.
442
"What were you thinking, Kristina?"
* *
Scott flashed a half
apologetic look as
Mom carried on.
"Don't you know the cops keep a lookout for kids like you?"
* *
I wasn't a kid. And
I'd never so much as seen a cop drive by.
Not yet, anyway.
443
Exiled
to my private mauve island where pretty
pink butterflies fluttered on my wall in a lovely E-enhanced butterfly dance,
I tried to be angry, but the ecstasy
wouldn't let me. In fact, it made
me take a peek at things from my
mom's POV. I
mean, we did
stay out until the cock woke up to stoke his crow. Not only that, but we did the very things she worried about us doing, and more.
Introspection
would be easy as a dual-edged
sword. If you
acquaint your
self with your
self, you don't
always like the person you find
inside. I could deal with that. The
bigger problem was discovering Bree
didn't really give a damn about liking me.
444
I
Spent the Next Day
helping Mom can tomatoes.
It was an annual event and I
had always hated the tedious
chore. But the last tiny tendrils of ecstasy, infiltrating me, somehow
made it enjoyable. I didn't even mind
my mom's company. In fact, my mood
seemed to rub off on her. She didn't once
bitch, though she enthusiastically quizzed
me about the previous evening's activities.
This very big part of me wanted to confess, to ask forgiveness, request help. Oh, I knew
my bad habits had escalated, and if Kristina
had had her way that day, well, who knows?
But over the last few weeks, Bree had grown
stronger and her argument--that Mom might
put her away, far removed from friends, Chase, and all personal choice--was feasible. So I
refused to waver from the concert and long
conversation excuse. And when she asked about drugs, I summoned every ounce of righteous indignation I could muster and denied touching a thing except a toke or
445
two of weed. I knew she wouldn't be
too upset about that. And by the time
all the jar lids popped down on row upon row of salsa, sauce, and ketchup,
I was still grounded. But at least
Mom wasn't as mad anymore.
446
Bur
ned Out
Burning
up, coming down,
I popped three
aspirin against the
* *
throbbing in my skull, and attempted a nap.
I laid in bed,
* *
sweating
out toxins, the last of the E and crank,
* *
aching from the inside out. Could I ever
shift into reverse?
* *
Falling from euphoria,
I face-planted into depression. Hard,
447
somersaulting through your own
manure. Harder yet to get back up without
* *
tripping and falling all over again. I felt out of control, a meteorite
* *
tumbling through space, tugged by gravity toward certain doom.
448
J
erked Awake
well after dark, yanked into consciousness by Mom and Scott, yelling in the hall.
* *
"Are you blind, Marie? You don't sleep like that unless you're crashing."
She's running a fever, Scott.
And just what makes you an expert?
* *
"Come on. We both know the scene.
You just refuse to believe it."
We had a long talk today. She swears
the only thing she has tried is pot.
* *
"Like your sweet, little Kristina is above lying to you?"
But what do we do? Search her
room? Have her tested?
* *
"We pull the reins tighter. No dates.
Straight home after school."
For how long? We can't keep her
locked up here forever.
* *
"At least until report cards come home.
If her grades are okay, she's free."
449
What about tonight? Should I try
to wake her up for dinner again?
* *
"Let her sleep, If she's really sick, she needs the rest. Especially after last night."
Okay. Just, please, try to keep
an open mind. And, Scott?
Thank you for caring.
450
R
eport Cards?
If grades were the criteria,
I would be in deep frigging dung.
Two weeks till "d" (for dung) day, no way could I make up for how
I'd screwed up this quarter.
* *
And if they were going to start
searching my room, I had some
serious stashing to do.
But I didn't dare move, not for a while. I stared off into the dark, thinking about Chase.
* *
No dates? Home straight after school? How could I live without seeing Chase?
Alone in my bed, I could taste
him, embrace him, feel his skin, warm against my own.
* *
There, as the house fell silent,
I could hear him tell me,
I
love you, Kristina.
Live without him? They couldn't
make me.
Wouldn't
make me.
I would go to him that night.
451
I grabbed my "hideables."
Out the window. Down the wall like a spider, on night prowl.
No way to call him to come and get me. How would I ever
get myself into Reno?
* *
One way came to mind.
I swallowed my fear and stuck out my thumb.
452
A
nyone Could Have Come Along
A rapist.
A serial killer.
Brendan.
* *
Lucky me.
I drew a cop.
* *
The black and white
approached slowly, crept past.
Brake lights flashed.
* *
Thank God I
thought to reach into my pocket and toss the contents into the weeds
* * as he pulled to the shoulder, red and blue revolving.
* *
I wasn't high, but I felt buzzed.
453
I wasn't holding, but I broke out in fear sweat.
* *
Goosebumps popped out like disturbed wasps.
How much would he notice?
* *
How much more would he guess?
(And how much did guesses count?)
454
He
Got Out of His Car
Evening, young lady.
His flashlight found my face, concentrating on my eyes.
* *
Kind of late to be out alone.
My mouth felt paralyzed.
All I could do was nod.
* *
Going somewhere important?
I drew a deep breath. Exhaled
slowly. "Just to a friend's."
* *
Do you realize it's after curfew?
I wanted to say something
smart. What I said was, "It is?"
* *
Do your parents know you're out?
Parents? Couldn't involve them!
"Th... they're out of town."
* *
I
see. Then I can't take you home.
Yes! He couldn't take me home.
Relief segued into apprehension.
* *
Looks like I'll have to take you in.
In? Where was "in"?
He couldn't mean jail?
* *
Tsk. Wittenberg isn't a good place.
455
Juvenile hall? I was dead!
Mom would kill me.
* *
...
for a nice girl like you.
He escorted me to his car, put me into the backseat.